Filed under: Dealing, Inspiration, Rest Days, The Race | Tags: days off, healing, marathon, running, struggle
I haven’t done any running. It was a relief for a while, and I’m still enjoying the time off, though I think it’s time to get back out there. I saw a few runners going along the Charles yesterday, and I felt a little itch.
Besides, I’ve officially signed up for the Philadelphia Marathon. It’s seven months away.
I guess it’s time to attack The Question, though. I started this blog a little over nine months ago, when I could barely see myself each day for the sadness and brokenness in my heart. The marathon was a goal, something to strive for, a path through the valley. Something that would make me strong. A goal to help me find me again.
I’m afraid to write this. Deep breath – type. Have I healed?
You can’t know this, but I just sat here for a few minutes, trying to decide what to type and how to type it. Because, you know, I would love to write a resounding, beautiful, uplifting paragraph, something that will raise up my readers in a shout of congratulatory glee, a big, loud, shining YES!
But I must give you the honesty you deserve, as loyal readers and friends who have followed my journey. The answer is no – at least, not entirely.
Hear me out, though. Let me tell you what training for a marathon does. Let me tell you about discovering the strength within myself and, even more importantly, the strength beyond myself. Let me tell you about a new steel and softness that I feel within me. It is as if my path to the marathon were lined with fruit trees, and as I ran I picked their fruit and tasted their fresh newness. Joy, strength, courage. Yes, I have courage now, and I do not think it wrong to assert this.
I still have battles to fight. I still have walls to break down. The journey to healing is not over. But now – now I have the tools I need. So in a sense, I suppose I am healed: I’m my own person again, and I think I always was; running just helped me discover that. But I’m a stronger person now. I’m more at peace with the present now. I know I have what it takes to keep going. I’m a marathoner.
What Now?
I have seven months to train for the Philadelphia Marathon, and this time I’ll have people to train with. My friends S and A will be making Philly their first marathon, and I’m very excited to “mentor” them. The real training won’t begin until late July, so there will be time for them to build their base mileage – and time for me to relax a little! I’ll still be running, but I’ll just be concentrating on maintaining my own base. I might do a couple of small races. There’s a nice little series along the Charles River this summer, mostly five-milers. Perhaps I can even get a little faster!
I was planning on closing this blog after the Marathon was complete, but so many people have been reading it that I may keep it open. Besides, I have had a little idea brewing for the past week. I’ve been thinking of starting a small, informal running club. Not everyone who goes through heartbreak has as strong a support group as I; perhaps I can provide it for them. It’s just a wisp of an idea, and nothing may come of it. But check back here every once in a while. Especially if you live in Boston.
It grows late, though. I have a lot to do tonight, especially since I’m getting up early tomorrow. I’m going running with J, just a little three-miler, slow and leisurely, before breakfast. I can’t wait to feel the road under my feet again, hear the quiet padding of my sneakers on the pavement, feel the soft spring breeze, like a sigh, against my cheeks.
I can’t control the weather, but I’m bummed. There are supposed to be terrible storms. Even if it just rains, part of the reason I picked this race was because of the awesome crowd support! I want hundreds of cheering people lining the streets! My friends will be troupers, of course, but I feel a little guilty for asking them to stand outside in the rain. I don’t anticipate this being as fun for everyone as I had hoped.
I did meet the chair of the Flying Pig board of directors at a cafe today! He used to live in Boston, and gave me his card in case I needed anything. They’ll never cancel the race, he assured me, as 28,000 runners from every state and 11 other countries are here to run. They’ve set up shelters in case the storms get dangerous, but it simply looks like everyone is going to get very, very wet.
Tonight, my friends start to trickle in. We have dinner planned at a French restaurant. I’ll be attempting to go to bed fairly early in preparation for the following night’s early bedtime and early – obscenely early – rise. Heh – it’ll be just like Disney, bad weather and all! At least I’m prepared.
I have a feeling things will get busy, and I don’t know how much blogging will happen before Sunday. I thought I would have a lot more to say in this last-ish, pre-race entry, but I think I may have already said it.
I re-watched Spirit of the Marathon yesterday and today. “Sometimes, the moments that challenge us the most define us.” It’s the first line of the movie. On Sunday, I’ll find out how this distance will define me. I’ll find out what kind of physical strength I have. I’ll find out how much mental fortitude lies in my mind, hidden, waiting. I’ll find out what, exactly, I am made of.
The Expo just opened down the block. I’m going to get my bib number and race packet now, and then I’m going to spend time with my beautiful girlfriends and my dedicated family, and then I’m going to eat a lot and sleep a lot.
And then I’m going to run a marathon.
Filed under: The Race, Training Runs | Tags: days off, dreams, gu, long run, marathon, nerves, Rest Days, running, shoes, short run, Taper
I purchased new shorts and a lovely blue lightweight tech shirt for the race. I tried the shorts out on my last “long” run – eight miles – and, disappointingly, they rode up a little. Most shorts do that when I run, but with a predicted temperature of seventy-three degrees (most runners dress for temperatures twenty degrees warmer than the actual, so do the math on that one), I’m going to go with my capris. I don’t want to be picking cloth away from myself for nearly five hours.
My Asics should be broken in enough. I was thinking of using my Guides, but I’ve done my last three weeks of running in these shoes, so Asics it will be.
I’m having anxiety dreams: I fly to the wrong city. I wake up too late. I get injured at the start of the course. I’ve forgotten my running sneakers.
Lists are beginning to form in my mind: Gu packets. Shoes and clothes. Body glide. Ibuprofen. Socks. Ponytail holders. Headband. (I can’t find my stupid headband!) Course map for friends and family. Watch. Sunblock. Camera.
There are other things I can’t control that I must make myself stop worrying about. Weather’s a big one. I haven’t run in hot weather at all. Worse than that, though, is the idea of a race cancellation. The ten-day weather forecast predicts scattered thundershowers all weekend. I’ve seen those Midwestern storms, and I’ve seen that lightning. It’s out of my hands, I know, but please, please let there be decent weather. I don’t know what I would do if these nine months were all for nothing.
I’ve gotten myself worked up, though, so it’s time to calm down. That’s what the Taper is for: recovery, relaxation, mental preparation. You hardly run, you eat a lot, you try not to obsess.
Six days.
Filed under: Longest Run Ever, The Race, Training Runs | Tags: fight, long run, marathon, running, running routes, struggle
….also known as the longest run before the marathon. Done. Check. Complete. Twenty miles. I ran…twenty miles. I RAN TWENTY MILES. Remember that line in Lord of the Rings when Sam asks, “How far to the nearest crossing?” and Merry replies, “Brandywine Bridge! Twenty miles!” and you breathe this sigh of relief, because you know they’re safe for a little while. Well guess what I RAN THAT today.
I also ran it sick, and I ran it on five hours of sleep. I had a late gig the night before, but I set my clock for five AM, pulled on my clothes, ate my usual pre-run snack, and was out the door at 6 AM. It took me a while. I was slower than I intended, doing a loop from my house, around the entire Charles River path, an extra mini-loop, and back. It took nearly four hours, though I actually added a half mile by accident (twenty POINT FIVE! OH!) and I stopped to use a porta-potty, so that added a few minutes.
Over twenty-four hours have passed, and I’m still sick and still tired – my nose is so stuffed up that I’m breathing through my mouth – but I want to write about this before the feelings become stale. I want to remember everything about it. The solitude of the morning, the sound of feet padding steadily along the path, pigeons cooing, water rippling. The gradual rise and bustling of the city, and the appearance of more runners on the path, some doing long runs, some just out for their morning jogs. The changing scenery, slowly – trees to low houses to college campuses to tall, downtown skyscrapers and then back again. The utter relief of seeing the last mile. The last stop sign. The last hill. The last block.
I think it was when I did my first 15-miler that I first experienced a strange sensation of wanting to cry during a run. Once again I felt it, and I still couldn’t tell you what it was. Exhaustion? Emotion? Both? I don’t know. I just know that I think it was mile 19 and I felt an overwhelming rush of…something. As if the physical and emotional sides to my body had melded together into one inseparable thing. It wasn’t a physical battle, though. It was a mental one. One foot in front of the other. One foot in front of the other. And things hurt, but not unhealthily, not badly.
And now it’s done. The longest run before the marathon. A forty-mile week. My training is at its end. This week begins my first taper, with a 12-mile long run, and then an 8-mile long run the next week. I still have to be vigilant, obviously. Eat right. Sleep right. Put in the shorter runs. Buy the stupid plane ticket, already.
Nine months have nearly passed. There is a question lurking. But I can’t answer it yet. Not until it’s done.
3 weeks until twenty-six-point-two.